Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Miscues cost Giants in loss to Padres

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SAN FRANCISCO (TNS) – In a game of inches, punctualit­y is just as critical as precision.

The Giants were neither on time or on the mark Friday against the Padres and it cost them in a 6-2 defeat to the last-place club in the National League West.

Manager Bruce Bochy’s squad unraveled in a sloppy top of the sixth inning, committing one physical error and at least two other mental mistakes that helped ignite a decisive two-run rally for the Padres.

After winning three in a row to climb back to .500, the Giants dropped to 38-39 with Friday’s loss and fell five games behind the firstplace Arizona Diamondbac­ks in the division.

The Giants are a veteran club filled with experience­d players at nearly every position, but on Friday, they came undone in the top of the sixth following a slew of mistakes characteri­stic of rookies.

After second baseman José Pirela opened the inning with a groundout, third baseman Cory Spangenber­g beat Giants starter Chris Stratton to first base on an infield hit that would have been an out if Stratton raced off the mound to

Bay Area News Group/tns San Diego Padres first baseman Eric Hosmer stretches to put out the San Francisco Giants’ Andrew Mccutchen during Friday night’s game at AT&T Park in San Francisco.

cover the bag.

Instead, a sensationa­l diving stop by first baseman Buster Posey turned into a base runner for the Padres. A Freddy Galvis single advanced Spangenber­g to third, and another mental error from the Giants allowed San Diego to break a 1-1 tie.

Following a wild pitch from Stratton, catcher Nick Hundley attempted to throw out Galvis running to second, but Hundley’s throw sailed wide of the base and into center field. Even if Hundley delivered a strike, second baseman Alen Hanson was late covering second and would

have had trouble collecting the throw.

Galvis took third and later scored on a groundball through the left side against a drawn-in Giants infield.

Trouble continued in the top of the ninth for the Giants, when a rookie did commit two miscues as reliever Pierce Johnson walked a pair of Padres hitters to open the inning. Johnson was relieved by lefty Will Smith, but Eric Hosmer poked a two out, two-run single to left field off of Smith to pad San Diego’s advantage and put the game out of reach.

A series of mental mistakes crushed the Giants, particular­ly on a night when Stratton allowed just two earned runs over six innings of work. Stratton didn’t help his own cause by failing to cover first in a timely manner, but the Giants offense did little to challenge Padres left-hander Clayton Richard.

The Giants finally sustained a rally against the Padres in the bottom of the seventh, as San Diego skipper Andy Green needed four pitchers to combine for three outs while the Giants closed their deficit to 3-2.

After Richard opened the frame and allowed a single to Andrew Mccutchen, Green tabbed Adam Cimber, Jose Castillo and Craig Stammen to finish off the inning. Pablo Sandoval delivered an RBI single against Stammen, but the right-hander rebounded by stranding the tying run at third base with Hanson at the plate.

Stratton tossed seven innings of one-hit ball in his first start against San Diego this season and boasted 132/3 career scoreless innings against the Padres. In two prior outings against the Giants this year, Richard surrendere­d a combined 10 runs and entered AT&T Park with a career 4.58 ERA in 22 outings against San Francisco.

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